| ichael . benson on Thu, 22 Jul 1999 00:35:30 +0000 |
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| Syndicate: lights off/lights on |
There's power, and then there's power, the subject. There's a
switch, and it's either on or off. Below it is a nuclear warhead, or
not. Browsing through today's Washington Post, I stumbled on one of
the best illustrations of the weird, scary, powered-up, powered-down
times we're living in. It takes the form of two stories:
(1) Power to Russian Nuclear Forces Is Shut Off
By Sharon LaFraniere
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 21, 1999
MOSCOW, July 20 -- In the latest sign of the Russian
military's financial straits, units in charge of
Russia's nuclear forces in the Far East reported
being left without power this week because the
utility bill has not been paid.
The cutoff temporarily incapacitated military radar
in the Khabarovsk region on the border with China,
local air defense chief Anatoly Nogovitsyn said,
according to the Associated Press. Water pumps quit
working and dozens of garrisons went dark, according
to unit commanders.
The Russian news agency Interfax said electricity
was cut off to units responsible for the strategic
rockets that make up Russia's "nuclear shield" and
for controlling Russia's air border.
The central command of the Strategic Missile Forces
later said in a statement that the cutoff had only
affected support facilities, not combat units.
However, the military's press service acknowledged
the situation was worrisome.
It was at least the third time in a year that
sensitive military installations have found
themselves without power because of unpaid bills.
A local authority switched off electricity to a
northern naval base where nuclear-powered submarines
were located last fall, and a missile testing site
was also temporarily left in the dark.
To military experts, the cutoffs are only one of the
more obvious signs of how Russia's control over its
nuclear arsenal continues to weaken.
Its early warning system for detecting ballistic
missile launches has deteriorated to the point that
space satellites can no longer cover U.S. missile
sites around the clock.
The conventional forces are in no better shape:
Soldiers live in deplorable conditions and sometimes
solicit passersby on city streets for money to buy
bread.
The Russian government, determined to show its
military is still a force to be reckoned with, has
staged large-scale military exercises in recent
months. The Kosovo war provided the military its
best argument in some time for more funding, and
Prime Minister Sergei Stepashin has promised to
increase defense spending.
But in the Far East this week, the Khabarovskenergo
power company got tired of waiting. Company
officials said the military owed more than $16
million and had ignored all pleas and warnings.
Military officials contend the debt was less than $6
million, and say complaints should be directed to
the Finance Ministry in Moscow, which has failed to
send the funds.
After a meeting with the regional governor, power
was restored--but only for the next three weeks,
according to the newspaper Izvestia.
(2) Lights Back on in Kosovo
By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 21, 1999
OBILIC, Yugoslavia, July 20 -- With the flick of a
match and fuel from an oily rag, one of five aging
generators was up and humming here today at Kosovo's
main power plant, promising the first supply of
reliable electricity since the end of the war.
But the problems encountered by NATO forces in
restarting the coal-fired plant--not to mention
lingering doubts about how long the Communist-era
relic will hold out--illustrate just how difficult
it will be to rebuild this rubble-strewn province
and bring together its ethnic Albanian and Serbian
communities.
The assembly of a joint work force of 600 ethnic
Albanians and 250 Serbs has been marred by periodic
threats and harassment from both sides, NATO
officials said, and workers say the two groups try
to avoid each other as much as possible.
Ethnic Albanians grumble that NATO's efforts, which
have focused on building a multiethnic work force,
have allowed too many Serbs to hold well-paying
jobs.
Employees on both sides predict that the Serbs, who
held more jobs and privileges than did ethnic
Albanians before the war, will leave once NATO
troops stop overseeing security.
Many Albanians were fired from the plant a decade
ago, when the Belgrade government stripped the
ethnic Albanian-majority province of autonomy and
installed local Serbs in most key positions.
"We can't cooperate with them," said Miftar Mehani,
37, an ethnic Albanian electrical technician who has
worked at the plant for a decade. "We are still
seeing the horrors, and there are people who I work
with who were part of that. . . . There's nothing
for them here now."
The 36-year-old power plant is a mess, a casualty of
years of neglect, but NATO officials insist it will
provide for Kosovo's near-term electrical needs
until a more modern plant can be reopened nearby.
But several workers said the older plant desperately
needs major upgrades, both to modernize equipment
and correct shoddy repairs and lax maintenance. The
boilers that power the generators are patched,
employees said, and spare parts were spirited away
long ago.
Officials say it will take weeks before the plant is
operating at capacity.
Then there is the problem of pollution. Zoran
Stanisavlievic, an engineer, said that each of the
plant's towering smokestacks emits 20 tons of acidic
coal ash per hour, sending up a gray-brown plume
that frequently blankets nearby Pristina, the Kosovo
capital, in the wintertime. "I will give it maybe 10
days," said Ingsabit Hyseni, 45, who oversees one of
the plant's control rooms. "It's very unstable, and
we are working it very hard. The whole electrical
grid is very damaged."
Nearly a third of Kosovo's people have no power,
including more than half the residents and
businesses in the hard-hit western part of the
province, according to Col. Max Heron of the British
Royal Engineers.
Both neglect and NATO's 78-day bombing campaign
badly damaged the electrical "supergrid" that covers
Kosovo, forcing officials to rely on local grids for
power.
Most heavy industry here has been shut down for
weeks or months, and a lack of power has been a
major obstacle to getting it restarted. Pristina and
other urban centers have also had to contend with
regular electrical and water outages since NATO
ended its bombing campaign five weeks ago.
With its one operating generator and electricity
imported from nearby countries, Kosovo now has the
minimal amount of power it requires, officials said.
With winter looming, maintaining and increasing that
capacity will be vital.
"In the last 24 hours, we have effectively doubled
the power available in Kosovo," Heron said, standing
in sight of an aging plaque extolling Tito, who
founded communist Yugoslavia in 1945. "Quite
clearly, restoration of power is one of the main
objectives. . . . The first thing we have to do is
get people back to work."
Heron and other NATO officials said the plant's
management eventually will be turned over to the
U.N. agency responsible for rebuilding the province.
British troops will continue to guard against
sabotage or conflicts between workers in the near
term, officials said.
-----------------------------------------
Michael Benson <michael.benson@pristop.si>
<http://www.ljudmila.org/kinetikon/>
Michael Benson <michael.benson@pristop.si>
<http://www.ljudmila.org/kinetikon/>
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